Abstract: | In recent years, the development of CAE (Computer Aided Engineering) in polymer processing has been remarkable, and it is expected to be more realistic in viscoelastic numerical simulation, particularly in three-dimensional complex geometry. Because of the problems of computational memory capacity, CPU time, and the numerical convergence of viscoelastic flow simulation, three-dimensional viscoelastic simulation applicable to industrial flow behaviors has not yet been attempted. In this paper, we developed the numerical simulation of three-dimensional viscoelastic flow within dies using a decoupled method, streamwise integration, and penalty function methods to decrease memory, and the TME (“Transformation of Equation of Motion to the Elliptic Equation,” S. Tanoue, T. Kajiwara, and K. Funatsu, The Eleventh Annual Meeting, the Polymer Processing Society Seoul, Korea, Extended Abstracts p.439) method, which raises the stability of convergence. We confirmed the reliability of this simulation technique to compare simulation results with experimental data of the stress field at a downstream wall shear rate of 5.41s?1 within a 60° angle tapered contraction die. We compared the predictions of a viscoelastic model (Phan-Thien and Tanner model) with a pure viscosity model (Carreau model) at a downstream wall shear rate of 120s?1 and discovered a remarkable effect of viscoelasticity in the shear stress and first normal stress difference in particular in the tapered region. |